
Serbia expects another sanctions waiver from US for oil company NIS, official says
BELGRADE, March 27 (Reuters) - Serbian oil company NIS (NIIS.BEL), opens new tab, majority-owned by Russia's Gazprom Neft (SIBN.MM), opens new tab and Gazprom (GAZP.MM), opens new tab, is likely to get a last-minute, 30-day extension to its waiver from U.S. sanctions, the CEO of state gas company Srbijagas said on Thursday.
The previous waiver is due to expire at midnight, and if it is not extended NIS could face crude supply cuts. NIS operates the only oil refinery in Serbia, which has annual capacity of 4.8 million tons and covers most of the Balkan country's needs.
"There will be more delays of sanctions ... , but we cannot expect more than 30 days," Srbijagas CEO Dusan Bajatovic told Belgrade-based Pink TV.
He did not say how he knew this information. Bajatovic is a member of Serbia's co-ruling Socialist party and Srbijagas is also a trade partner of Gazprom.
NIS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
As part of its January 10 sanctions on Russia's oil sector, the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control gave Gazprom Neft 45 days to exit ownership of NIS.
On March 19, NIS sought a 30-day waiver of the sanctions, an extension of the first reprieve approved on Feb 27, to secure more time to find a solution with the Russian companies.
On February 26, Gazprom Neft transferred stakes of around 5.15% in NIS to Gazprom in an attempt to ward off sanctions.
The transfer follows a similar change in 2022 when the company avoided EU sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.
Gazprom Neft now owns 44.85% of NIS, while Gazprom has 11.3%. The Serbian government holds 29.87%, and small shareholders the rest.
NIS imports about 80% of its needs through Croatian pipeline operator Janaf, with the remainder covered by its own crude oil production in Serbia.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
6 hours ago
- NBC News
This phone is made in the USA, and Trump's name isn't on it
President Donald Trump's family business is taking preorders for a gold-colored smartphone, the T1. Trump Mobile, which launched Tuesday, says the device will be available in September, cost far less than Apple's and Samsung's smartphones — and be made in the United States, aligning with the president's 'America First' economic ethos. Industry experts and tech journalists instantly cast doubt on those claims. And if Carlsbad, California-based smartphone maker Purism is any example, it would take much more than two months for Trump Mobile to build an American-made smartphone from scratch. It would also likely be more expensive than the T1's advertised price of $499. At $2,000, Purism's Liberty Phone is more expensive than an iPhone 16 Pro. It has half the iPhone's memory with roughly twice the thickness. You also can't download many apps on it. According to Todd Weaver, who founded Purism in 2014, it's the only U.S.-made smartphone on the market. But with 'kill switches' to turn off its wi-fi, camera and microphone, the Liberty Phone is marketed as a secure option because it also carries its own operating system designed by Purism. It took a lot of time and effort to get to that point, Weaver told NBC News. Going from 'I would like to make a phone, and I would like to make it in the U.S.' to actually achieving it took six years, he said. Purism's assembly line consists of just four people screwing together phones by hand — a far cry from the shoulder-to-shoulder line of people and automated machinery often associated with mass production facilities in China. The 'Made in the USA electronics' sticker that Purism slaps on the product is a declaration of confidence — since the Federal Trade Commission regulates claims of that sort. Yet even Purism's built-in-America phone needs some foreign help. Ninety percent of the phone's materials come from the United States, Canada or Europe. Among the components made elsewhere: a chassis from China, camera modules from China or South Korea, and a bluetooth module from India. Purism publishes this information online. For materials like a specific crystal necessary for the motherboard to operate, Purism says there are no options for U.S. sourcing, meaning there's no choice but to buy from China. 'There just isn't a company yet providing that single crystal,' said Weaver. The Trump Organization didn't respond to NBC News' questions about how Trump Mobile's T1 phone would be made. Another issue looming over the market: Trump's ever-shifting trade policies. The president recently threatened a 25% tariff on all smartphone imports, taking aim at manufacturers like Apple and Samsung that make their phones abroad. 'Again, when they build their plant here, there's no tariff, so they're going to be building plants here,' the president said last month. The percentage of the materials for Purism's phone that come from overseas is small enough that tariffs from the Trump administration would not affect its $2,000 price. But the tariffs would affect a phone Purism does make in China, called the Librem 5. It's currently priced at $800 but new import duties would take it closer to the Liberty phone's $2,000 level. While tariffs are a 'good incentive' for manufacturing in the U.S., Weaver said, the on-again-off-again approach from the administration makes it tough to plan. 'It's terrible,' Weaver said. 'If you have no idea, and you can't predict [the policy], it's very hard for any company, for any business owner. From t-shirts, textiles, to high tech, it is very hard to make a long term business decision when you're in a whipsaw.'


Business News Wales
7 hours ago
- Business News Wales
Period Care Brand Launches in Waitrose Stores Across the UK
The UK's leading organic period-care brand, TOTM, has announced its launch into British supermarket, Waitrose. The Cardiff-based firm said the collaboration marks a big step in TOTM's trajectory, as it strives to lead the menstrual health agenda with its range of 100% certified organic cotton products. Chair at TOTM, Ruby Parmar, said: 'Access to better period-care should be non-negotiable. We are incredibly proud to be launching into Waitrose, bringing our market-leading range to a discerning new demographic. 'At TOTM we offer period-care solutions with the promise of quality and comfort without compromise, building customer relationships on trust and transparency. Being part of the Waitrose portfolio feels like a natural next step; one that will expand TOTM's reach exponentially and elevate our proposition among conscientious shoppers.' Rachel Gill, Sanitary Care Buyer at Waitrose, said: 'Our customers are increasingly looking for high-quality and ethical options across our products, and period-care is no different. We're delighted to make sustainable choices easier than ever with the launch of TOTM.' TOTM will be stocked in selected Waitrose stores across the UK, with product prices ranging from £3 to £3.75. The brand will debut with an introductory month-long offer of 25% off all its products for Waitrose customers.


Spectator
7 hours ago
- Spectator
Mark Carney, the mischief-making pin-up
Well, would you look at Mark Carney. Just three months ago I described the incoming prime minister of Canada and former governor of the Bank of England as 'a fish-out-of-water technocrat' who made little public impact over here and was swiftly forgotten after he left in 2020. When I once came across him hunched and dark-suited in the Pret queue at King's Cross, midway through his Bank tenure, I actually felt sorry for him. But here he is, beer-swigging in an Ottawa bar with Sir Keir Starmer; cutting Donald Trump short in a press call before the G7 meeting; shedding his eco-credentials to champion Canadian oil and gas; and generally looking the statesman at ease with his people. What happened? A Canadian connection tells me the answer is all to do with Carney's paternal ancestry in Ireland's County Mayo: 'He's unleashed his inner leprechaun and he's on a mission to make mischief for the big orange buffoon south of the border. What's more, the ladies think he's hot.' It makes me wonder about his charisma-free Bank of England successor, Andrew Bailey, who has barely been seen in public this year. What leap on to the world stage might he be planning for his next career? Fever in the air Would a flurry of merger-and-acquisition activity in the banking sector constitute evidence of rude health – or a cyclical warning of troubles ahead? Metro Bank, the glossy but struggling high-street challenger, is being stalked by a private equity outfit called Pollen Street Capital. Santander last month rejected an £11 billion offer for its UK network from the reinvigorated NatWest. TSB, the former Trustee Savings Bank that was sold by Lloyds to Banco Sabadell of Spain a decade ago, is for sale again with its five million customers, while Sabadell itself fights off a takeover bid from its domestic rival BBVA. All across Europe, says one LinkedIn commentary, 'bank M&A fever is in the air'. Behind all this is a growing belief that expansion by takeover might now be a better use of surplus capital than share buybacks – and will deliver economies of scale in a sector that would benefit from consolidation to fight digital disruptors. The counterargument is that all banking mergers, especially across borders (as Sabadell discovered with TSB), are fraught with management conflicts and incompatible IT systems. And ambitious bidders who claim they're building regional or global champions are too often tempted to overpay. Caveat emptor – and let's hope the regulators stay ahead of the new game. Flight risk A news story with painful implications for London's insurance market has reached a largely unnoticed turning point – though perhaps not a final conclusion – in the High Court. This is the £3.4 billion case of 147 commercial aircraft which had been leased to Russian carriers but were effectively stolen on 10 March 2022, days after Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine, when Moscow legislators made it impossible for the planes to be repossessed by their lessors – of whom the largest is an Irish company, AerCap. Insurers led by Lloyd's of London refused to pay out on the lessors' 'war risks' cover, but Mr Justice Butcher has now ruled that they must, on the grounds that the loss is not a commercial matter but the result of an act of the Russian state. As indeed it was: my man who tends the Kremlin vegetable plot tells me this was a carefully pre-planned heist which won promotion for the aviation minister responsible. Meanwhile, the insurers are also being pursued in the courts of Dublin, the world capital of aircraft leasing. But the hope is that settlement will now be reached between all the western parties and their well-remunerated lawyers, while the lost fleet continues flying within Russian airspace for as long as its operators can source illicit spare parts. A curious sidelight on the way the money world works is that I happen to be a trustee of a small Yorkshire charity which is awaiting a payout of a different kind, in the form of a legacy from a deceased benefactor who happened to be a Name on some of the Lloyd's underwriting syndicates that insured the aircraft in question. So our transformational bequest will be reduced, at several removes, by the evil hand of Putin. Pottery dame In a birthday honours list on which business barely got a look in, I was delighted to see a DBE for the potter Emma Bridgewater, whose cheerful mugs and bowls fly the flag for the traditional craft of Stoke-on-Trent in defiance of foreign competition. After starting her venture 40 years ago because she could not find a cup and saucer she liked as a present for her mother, Bridgewater built it up to employ more than 450 people and achieve peak annual sales in 2022 of £38 million. But it has since fallen into losses and 'workforce optimisation', so I hope the gong encourages her to battle on. I'm confident she'll do so, having encountered her feistier side a couple of years ago in a ding-dong debate over dinner at the Aldeburgh literary festival. The trigger was a reference by me to another Stoke-on-Trent venture with a female chief: namely the Bet365 sports betting empire led by the UK's highest-paid executive, Denise Coates, who I have also occasionally praised here for her entrepreneurial thrust and whose personal pay package is a multiple of the Bridgewater company's entire turnover. Insensitively, I argued that in the evolution of 21st-century capitalism, regulated online bookmaking is as worthy as manufacturing if it brings new wealth, jobs, tax revenues and philanthropic funding to the post-industrial Potteries. The riposte was fierce, but if there's ever an opportunity for another round, I think I might add that honours, as it were, are now equal: Coates has pots of money but Bridgewater's pots have made her a Dame.